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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Impairment of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance
regulator (CFTR) Cl channel causes cystic fibrosis, a
fatal genetic disease. Here, to gain insight into CFTR structure
and function, we exploited interspecies differences
between CFTR homologues using human (h)-murine (m)
CFTR chimeras containing murine nucleotide-binding
domains (NBDs) or regulatory domain on an hCFTR backbone.
Among 15 hmCFTR chimeras analyzed, all but two
were correctly processed, one containing part of mNBD1 and
another containing part of mNBD2. Based on physicochemical
distance analysis of divergent residues between human
and murine CFTR in the two misprocessed hmCFTR chimeras,
we generated point mutations for analysis of respective
CFTR processing and functional properties. We identified
one amino acid substitution (K584E-CFTR) that disrupts
CFTR processing in NBD1. No single mutation was identified
in NBD2 that disrupts protein processing. However, a number
of NBD2 mutants altered channel function. Analysis of
structural models of CFTR identified that although Lys584
interacts with residue Leu581 in human CFTR Glu584 interacts
with Phe581 in mouse CFTR. Introduction of the murine residue
(Phe581) in cis with K584E in human CFTR rescued the
processing and trafficking defects of K584E-CFTR. Our data
demonstrate that human-murine CFTR chimeras may be
used to validate structural models of full-length CFTR. We
also conclude that hmCFTR chimeras are a valuable tool to
elucidate interactions between different domains of CFTR.
Description
Keywords
Doenças Genéticas
Pedagogical Context
Citation
J Biol Chem. 2010 Aug 27;285(35):27033-44. Epub 2010 Jun 15
Publisher
The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
